The daily Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1863-1866, February 09, 1864, Image 2

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Viltsibagli,
I. 'RIDDLE sk CO.,
M3DAY MORNING 1864
- -- .
.
' e hare the great pleasure, to-day, of
1 ,
presenting to our . t.ll the first Sissec.h in
Congress of the flo 1 Tnonas itratritts.
As we read with ' a" ' lof admiration end
sympathy some of r eloquent passages, we
do not wonder at is t some of our friends
at Washington hat recently wri(ten to rm,
that those who had the more enviable plea
titre o f
~ were Impressed with the
Striking characteristics of the gifted !speak
sr—his rich acquisitions of knowledge,
great argnmentatire skill, and ready com
mand of alt his resources, bagetterwith that
tory energy--that perfervidum ingemium—
which fines andmoulds tends purpose what
arm material he works upon.
The Volunteer Syelem.
The present spirit or . volluttaering,
to
gether with the liberal contributions of the
people towards the paymead irf local boun
ties, Is the most cheering and hopeful sign
we have had Ohmo the glorious uprising of
1861, and indicates that our work is nearly
dam It fact, judging from the aspect of
things both on one side and that of the Re
hellion, we think the men who are now
going into service will have a short term,
spa kat little fighting to do; for it is in;
possible that the so-called Contbderate
Government can maintain the struggle
much longer, without money (for the Con
federate script, worth only from five. to
eight cents on the dollar can no longer be
Balled money;) without financial credit ;
without the confidence oven of the people
who, three years ago, rushed many Into
seeeszion ; without any reasonable hope
of effecting •'a permanent separation
of their States from the Union, and
Witiunitibe'hope of saving their darling
Institution, .for the sake of which they
plunged Valor:4mi treason and made war
upon a government which, for half a cm
terey, hid petted and favored Them beyond
their deserts. The dark pall of despair is
feet settlingdown upon the hearts of their
piiplit and their soldiers; and while the one
Cilia are expressing, in everyway they dare
to do it, their despondency and discontent,
the other are embracing every possible
chance to desert from the hopeless and
. hated service. Every token, indeed, por
tends a speedy downfall of the traitorous
concern, and a glad return of a deceived
and outraged people to the protection of the
. old flag and the old laws. "Lot us see the
old flag," said some women of Alabama to a
column of soldiers on a weary march; and
when it was encased and unfurled before
their eye! they wept for joy. This little
Incident showa us whore the hearts of the
peopleof the South aro, and this kindling
Saute of patriotism will consume, with a
vengeance never dreamed of by its most
earnest opposers, the accursed system that
• has so long repressed their energies, kept
them In moral lend political degradation,
slain their people in a wicked war, and has
now plunged them into a vortex of desola
tion and rain.
The desperate men who are ruling and
snlning the South, know as well as we do
whittle going on in the North; and when
they see this new uprising of the people,
this fresh irruption of volunteeis, this gen
ercalsoutpouring of both men and money,
they will begin to look out for some way of
escape; for, mail and desperate u they are,
they hue sense enough to know that they
eitutot beer up against the exhaustless and
unoonquirable North any longer. It is'
this oonsideration that gives such iricalna
. lab'svalue to this volunteer movement, and
-; it is this that ought to prompt the people of
'evirieristrict in the country to furnish
itsvota of men in that way. Even inv.
,- 4tre, devil as he 18,_cannot, but be appalled
when he contrasts his atrociously cruel syr
lom of replenishing. thil. army with ours;
sad ell mankind will acknowledge the
flenesset the two systems to the objects in
View— , freemen Setting for liberty, slues
, ftwilavery.
so, keep the work going on. Volunteers
began this war for the Union; volunteers
have borne its teirible brunt, and let volttn
tsars end it. The impending draft is right;
because it equalizes,- as far as human es !
gulty aqd legislstion can equalize any
thing, the great burden of saving the cone
. try; but them is no reason why the people
of any sub district should contribute their
quote in that form.
Napoleon the Third and the Opp's*KWh.
qfelekeir the P.ria correspondent of
the Nee Turk Time, reforzing to the hoe
debate fin:the Address in the French Chaos
bevand the semesktble baldeess of Ile
ohlera of the Opposition, pots and anisette
the following queitione:
- Dot whet will be the effect on the man
et the Talleriee? For, after all, be con.
"?role the majority of the Chamber, and eon
dose be pleases . knows that Paris le
against and that his party at Paris is
oomposecrisolesteelyit office-holders, so
tbsts in, WA be bee no - pair. be
Swift live in to the alroost universal de
resod Ice liberty,or !steer "truth his for-'
rude le - the leg of "plena earely"—le
ether words, to the power of despotic
measure's? At peceeut he seems disposed
to allot to the latter alternative ne the
infest; but the present bold and menacing
attitude of the democracy, I predic', will
force Met tochance hie tactics.
_ _
Tait Oil...ma:ma Cosostts.—The op.
petition meriabere or e.o.m.'s* have sp
pasted tbefollowing eommitose, to permute
an address to the country. It is composed
of member from each Congresslonal
g'ilomoenstio" Slate delegation :
hisine. Lorenzo - Sweat; New Ilsmptiblre,
Daniel .Marey; Consentient - T. E. English;
New Frenois.Earnen; Now JITSIP7,
William Wright.; Pennsylvania, 0. B.
littetalew "Maryland, '
0. Harry- Ohl*,
°eerie D'iise; K.0.,,cky,, Wm. Wads,.
:worth; Indiana, Thos. A. Hendricks; Illi
nois, lames-0 Allen; -Missouri, Wm: A
Augusttis C. Baldric* Wis.
edasio,! - .l4ines 8. 11,01 a; CsUrengs:.l' A:
31 D 0 01 10; Delaware, Willard Saulsbury.
Venation of the Southern Cotifedera
Die actaragement, in the meanwhile, is
znahing - fprogrece, - in the Beath. There le
no longer Ins mom 'ardor to combat, nor
the cams determination to conquer. - The
army,-which is commanded by . Gen. Lee,
the. best of. Nl really-114gs to show the
teat of-the trials and•privatione which it
bss beau Viidergoiog for two years. , The
demoralization' with' which It la infected,
Mittel:oM. the battle .at ;Gettysbargr it
would' reqiiire . a very -signal success to
check it, and Gen. Lee, however brave and
'able he may be, min hardly expect a victory
In circumstances lirwhich he Is actually
fotk Canso:ante( of Ms
Paris Nonitette. . . •
Bonito . ,Tmoincita.—Tbe Suez "kn.
air, s Demoorstiti .. psper of Idaisachuseits;
- • soir announcing:lbn gubliostlon of Pao
repoit, and MO:disgust: it bad
found in ?caning it, obnorven, with grist .
Tkitt to.ni tber !infanta of lint bulb
of es -*doge ittstA The - pan Is Waterfalls
, f."- , Thu b prsoiiity opimost
Az, r4A.
~h.~~~
_,t:.
.. ,
liPeccit': of Men.... i ibonlits , Willtaitis on
.-..: the garouwati Bill. -: --
.
...
Mr. "Ghtdrian, if-ibli•itad been • new
queation I should hare felt_ greatlyember
ruled as to the policy or propriety of com
muting military service for money. This
lea war measure, and not a revenue Men
ai/M. The Government wants men and net
money,- The latter has been furnished by
the people with Unstinted' and ungrudging
liberality; nay, with • prodigality which
has surprised ourselves. and at which the
world Mande amazed. I do not know how
to value thetout heart or the strong arm
of the Ante can 'freeman in the current
imoney of th merchant. Ido not like the
tratlio in menand muscle and sinew, whether
it be white or black. Looking to the ex
perience of other republics, I should great
ly deprecate the conversion of the soldier
of ours into a mercenary. Between men of
American growth and training and. the
richest of the metals I know no common
standard of comparison. With me they are
quantities incommensurable. When the
Republio demands theservices of her chil
dren, I know no answer they can make ex
cept that of bane, that they are ready for
the sacrifice. It is the answer which their
- uncalculatitHig instincts prompted when the
echoes. of the guns in Charleston harbor
thrilled along their nerves, and half a mil
lion of them spring to their arms at the
first summons of the President to avenge
the ineultto our deg; when the Very yearn-
Inge of maternity were hushed, and the
American, like the Spartan mother, arrayed
her youngest born as though it tad been
for the bridal, put the musket in his hands,
and sent him out with the invintation of
God's blessing upon his errand, and the in
junction to do his.duty and come back upon
his ehield, if such were the fortunesof war,
but not without it It is the answer they
would still make if their ardor were not
chilled by the fatal and inglorious inaction,
the wearisome delays, the inadequate ro
sette, and the want of earnestness, which
have distinguished so many of our com
manders or,
what is worse still, if their
love of coun try was not overlaid aztdamoth
end by the devilish suggestions of wicked
counselors who have squatted at their ears
and distilled into them the subtle venom of
party.
They have ceased, however, to make that
answer. Enthusiasm was too weak to survive
rebuffs and disappointments, while treason at
home was bat too ready to make them the oc
casion for -denunciations against the Govern
ment and question. as to the rightfulness and
the successful results of the war. It has be
come, of course, a necessity to remind the
backward of their duty, and to insist that it
shall be performed. These arguments have
prevailed, however, with many of the people
who hid been accustomed to take counsel
from the malcontents. They have held back
accordleglynntil it has become indispensable
to awaken them ta a sense of the obligation.
which they owe to 'their country. Their ad.
visors do not, however, deny the duty; so far
as lip-service is concerned, there to an abund
ance of it. But they insist that the perform.
ante shall be a voluntary one, o?;‘ in other
words, that it shall rest in their own discre
tion. Like Faletalr, they would do nothing
~n compulsion. To compel • Democrat to
Oght would be anti-republican, or if there is
to be compulsion It mast be, upon the anther
ity of a great casuist of the Bomish church,
who her not read Bellarmine in vain and
knows how to tarn • corner as adroitly u the
original and inimitable Jack himself, • vol
outer; one, • sort of compulsion in the Pick.
sticklers sense. To compel him in any other
way would be a violation of his prerogative
..s a freeman. A perfect liberty u the right
of doing what we please, but never anything
on compulsion. j
Sod tow a word or two in sober earnest on
the objection taken seriously here, and urged
throughout the country, in relation tette le
gitimacy of the draft. I need not apologise
for speaking on that point. It is always ins
portant to satisfy the people not only that a
thing is law hut that it is right. It is always
well to add the sanctions of conscience and
the sense of duty to the mandates of the law•
giver. Without this laws are practically Im
potent. The "sic vole, sic jab.", ea pro ra
n tio
ee, btants" of an imperial reseript is not
the argument for an American citizen. Ile
want' more than it, and he wants it hen be
cause immense pains have been taken to Cloud
his perceptions and pervert his morel sense by
representing the compulsory performance of
the highest of his duties as a violation of his
liberties. The oracles of the Opposition have
proclaimed—their highest legal authorities In
Proinsylrania, in the exercise of a Jurisdiction
heretofore unknown, have decided—that the
act of the last session was unootuithutional
Men squally trusted by them here have in
sisted that its principle was anti-republician.
It is iTP 9II -suts therefore, to Inquire whether
these things are Ito—whether there is any
thing her, to ardherise these imputations or
to excuse even a retaetant.submtssion to a
measure which Is essential to the safety Of the'
nation and has been made necessary by -the
entracte of the very men who now complain
*fit. _ _
I do not propose to enter into objection. of
detail arising out of the pendiar femme. of
the law or to argue the question upon merely
technical or professional gonads. These are
for the courts. This I. a higher forum, and
the objection made to the principle—radical as
it Is—an appeal front the lawyer to the pub
licist, from the courts to the people. It is the
statesman who must decide it, and not the
judge.
Is it true, then, that a compulsory levy of
troops—a conscription, if you Ideate—ln the
extremity oft State is antl.repubilcan in prin.
dple, or, in other words, at war with the spir
it of our Institutions and the genius and char
acter of this Government? It has been so
announced o4this door,on authority supposed
to be conclusive, and has gone to the country
without contradiction.. It mu a challenge of
the law (rem.* higher point than the Consti
tution. It was not the assertion to terms that
the law was to variance with the Constitution,
but in effect that the Constitution itself was
not republican, and did not conform to the'
fundamental idea on which It rested. It. wee
the proclamation of a higher law which the
anti:miry "to raise and support armlet" had
impinged upon.
Well, I am no higher-law man, except so
far as the consideration of the publio safety or
the nation's life may make me ao. lam not
ashamed or afraid to roes pia public!
the maxim of the wiles po ph se y
W 65 /provision of 5003 et mutate . .
constitution of republican Bo to in
which in the judgment of one y age was the
and profoundest statesmen of an as the sew
swum of all its grandeur as well Led a Mots•
enter, edits stability, which area cell, for the
torship for times of great public p !hooted so
reason that such a power moat be
the'extremities to which every litate is subject,
and that where It fa wanting ttbecomes twee..
eery to violate the constitution—which is al
ways of bad ersiople—in ordain the salvation
of the State:
Per the rake of . iriaateri olearnese, I quote
the pelage itself, translated by me from the
French version in default of =English one,
of the "Trestles on the Republic," by Mach
iavelli
"Mb part orate constitution of Rome disarms to
be remarked, and ranked in Abe number of Mom
which contribute the mart to the greatness of its em•
vice. • Without en Institution orals nature, a State
annot acatiebnt with great difficulty from extra
ordinary convulsions." •
••••• • • • •
"It follow. from Ibis that all republics must hare
In their cousUtutions alike establishment. Whorl It
Is wanting It became neosaary, by punning the
ordinary track, to see the cosuclattlon perish, or
rather to depart from It for the purpose of mead it.
But in a State well constituted no event most happen
for which there .ball be occasion to resort to extra.
ordinary ways:for If eitraordimay means do g ood
for the moment, metre:ample consumes • real evil.
Thababit of violating Ma constitution to do good
sttenrards authorise. la violation to color arts. A
republic, tharifore • ls nenny.,perfect If ite laws have
riot provided to trurythine, held the remedy always
in inema, and furnished the means of employing
It. And I conclude by *eying - that. the republic.
which In Imitedmmt danger@ have no recourse either
toe Mete= or to like magfarstee most Inevitably
pat& tbereb."
The w a r power of oar Constitution is the
equivalent of the liothan dictatorship. It is,
howeier, here as well u there, the extreme
medicine of the Constitution, and not its daily
bread.. The' mission of • republio is pesos;
war I** state.of elide:lee. To waded an
army upon the principles of republican equal
ity would be fatal- to all' enbordination and
discipline.. Tot shah enes this the
normal condition of a nimbus inn not serve.
Its very organtuition would forbblit. - War
Is anti-republican in Co ease% and can only
be successfully. waged - on anti.ripubliont
WbUs it pprevails the--l aw itself
must almost n y be ellent. - .lts - codo
of laws is necessarily anti.republienn.' With
snob a Government, therefore, iris an =nat.
erti condition, and the thirst for territodid
agpandiestoeut through the agency of. Ihe
sword does ,Maria to ilf nature and its life.
Berwhlle wan of conquest are sinti.rsTrubli
asn, a war of s e lf - defence to proem the is . -
tisn'i life is *legitimate because it is a nes
ceenry eta The dottrine of non.resistaiie
would be fata -- o any Gentialnailt. What
there!, no mode left. of supporting the Con.
siltation, exespily suornding the enjoyung
ofen individual. right , that right -mut yield
to the honchos : not the Constitution
that nulterites - the-Jimprnsion of the Law
Bitiajpslsisit; as its framers - did, the
'llecsissitY of aattbg, blahs it. privilege of
Aks.:,altassalfis .*abeisksl... l2 tor . : 4o 4oSsidoit
loal may_ esagrg.' , ter' atistarsjtS . stialisai
.proviabg Qua fa 041 stat stispsallalarasa
. ,
_
, _
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_ -..:,_}% v;i',.. , r...+I~:SL.:Ji::.Y.:: F_~::5_..._._._,__.~... -»:,45..
w-__v'~-.s- -
.• L.
in the 'eases indicated. 1 Every_ ittribnie of
sovereignty which pertains to any Govern,.
Meat Drat is sopranos may be exercised when
necessary, unless it is expressly forbidden.
Thus the right of eminent domain as it Is call
ed by the publicists, or that whi ch authorises
tbo 'Mitzi, or destruction of private, property
for pubilenses, and the kindred-power of MX - -
talon which tetras it without other equivalent
than the protection which the government
Affords, ere not the subjects of spa. ial :poet,
het only of special (imitation. Establish a
Government that is independent and sover•
Adgn, andghey belong to It of coarse, because
they are elven tint attributes, inseparable from
its very being. If a Government can, bow.
ever take r private property, which is the
product of labor, witaout compensation, for a
public use, it {S bet a step loather, sad an
easy one, to take the producer himself, as it
does when it compels him• to work on the
highway on the ground of public necezeity.
It is not disputed, as I understand, by any•
body here, that the Government is entitled to
the military services of all its citizens when
they are needed for its defense. The objec
tion is only that a compulsory levy in anti
repubNcon. If this be true, then the idea of
such a thing as a republican government Is
the wildest of chimera.. Admitting the duty,
the right to enforce It is a corollary, a neces
sary consequence, in this case as in all other..
The notion of any government at all presup
poses .npremeoy, subordination, and oor,-
straint. No government ever did or ever
can rest upon the mere voluntary principle.
All the duties of the citizen, except these
merely moral ones that are said to be of im
lerfect obligation—all that are political at
east—rest upon the idea of coercion. That
is the principle of every law. That is the
import of the whole judicial machinery with
which we are surrotueded. The posse conlitatua
Itself is nothing more nor less than a compul
sory levy, an army Improvised to execute the
laws. When the time arrives—which will
not be until.the millennium foreshawdowed
by the prophet, and several years after the
modern Democracy *hall have died out like
the extinct monsters of the earlier geological
epochs—when men shall perform their duties
voluntarily, there will be no further occasion
for either government or laws. The notion
that the mob of New 'York, and the unnat•
nral symputhizers with the rebellion every
where, shall not be compelled to defend the
Government that protests them in all their
rights and endows them with the unwonted
privilege of governing other people. Is bet
the extension of the argument of the late At •
tamey General of the United States, and tee
reporter of Its Supreme Court, that there
could be no coercion of Slates, and that this
great Government war without even the
power of self-defense, was entirety helpless
against the parricide, and meet uncover its
bottom, or wrap Its robes around it and
submit to death without a struggle when
ever the murderous blow was aimed by We
band,. of its own children. That was accord
ing to programme. Both have the same pur
pose and meaning. That would have crowned
the work of the traitors with immediate
ens. This is a slower poison, which would
leave the difpnee of the nation to the loyal
Unionist initte geld, and transfer the direc
tion of the Government to the hands of the
auxiliaries of the rebellion, who choose "to
kin my lady peace at horns ;" who know chit
they can serve the cense they lore with more
effeet and greater safety hero by affecting loy ,
alty, misrepresenting the designs of the Gov
ernment, discouraging volunteering, and de
nouncing compulsory levies of mete, than
by
taking their places openly in the armies of the
confederacy. I do not know a man of them
whii Is not now an ...unconditional Unionist,'
provided ho can have "the Union as it was,"
which he knows to be impossible, whether w•
sneered or fail, or treat, as he desires us to do,
and hopes to bring about by cherishing the
disease, preserving the cause of the disunion,
and declining to employ the most necessary
and effective weapon which Providence has
placed in our hands for compelling the event
ual restoration of the Union Itself. Thank
God I the in•tincts of the people, the l.i al
army at home, have revolted at the special
plea of the attorney, and even converted him
at the Late elections into the noisiest of
patriots and the professed advocate of the
vigorous prosecution of the war; that in to say,
00 peace principles, and provided you will re
fuse to alioro the willing negro or maps/ the
reluctant and recalcitrant Democrat to tight
The fear is, In viewed the well-known Army
sentiment. that it would change the very na
ture of the latter by showing him the realities
of war and making him a radical, or, in other
words, an earnest man.
We have the authority of olio of the apostles
of the new Democracy now holding a seat on
ids doer, If the newspapers have not mi.-
represented him, for the opinion publicly no
pressed in the great pew convention at New
York, that a war Democrat is an impossible
thing; and that any man who would draw
sword here in such a quarrel—l mean on this
aide of it—ls no hotter than a Black Republi
can. And so it 11 that, while all the Demoo
rag of Butler and Barnside and Hooker and
other fighting generals of that stamp, who
have piOlad that they were In earneat, Las
failed to shelter them from the denunciations
of the rebel papers In Richmond and New
York, the nun-combatant qualitiea of the
grave-digger of the Chickahominy and the
loiterer at Bull Run hare made him the idol
of the Democracy In both thou, capitals. if
the gentleman from Kentucky, who we. used
a few days ago by his culleaguee with infidel
ity to his pledges to vote for a war Democrat,
had adverted to the sentiment to which I have
just referred, he might have answered that a
war Democrat was a myth—a personage even
more apecryphal than Prater John or tho man
with the iron mask.
If it be true, however, that a compulsory
levy of men for the protection of the Severn
meet or the enforcement of its laws Is anti
republican, then I say again that republican
government is Just as imposeible a thing as a
war Democrat The nation which cannot
command the military service, of its pop le
has no guarantee of life, and must inevitably
perish in its first formidable convulsion. To
presume' that they will all rash to its stand
ard at the first summons, and that they will
adhere to it alike through good and 11l for
tune, alike through ennehine and through
storm, is
. to suppose in the face of our present
experience that it contains no bold traitors
who will lift their hands against It In battle,
no cowardly miscreant, who, with prefeseiono
of loyalty on, their lips, will adopt the safer
policy of skulking from Its defense, or aiding
and encouraging those who are attempting to
overthrow It. The time was when this ser
vice was a privilege of rank or fortune ; when
the soldier served without wages, although he
derives his name from the idea of pay, and
When the craven who refuted to respond to
the summons of hie country mu visited with
the dire anathema which le so well parapitras •
ed by the genius of the immortal Scott, and
Rods its climacteric in the imprecation, " Woe
to the traitor, woe I" A greater than he has
remarked that " the age of chivalry is gone,
and the age of sophistera and economists has
succeeded." It was not so at the commence•
meet of this robe lion.
I happened to be at the seat of government
of Pennsylvania when the news of the bom
bardment of Sumter came over the electric
wires, and shook its capital as with an earth
quake throe, and then aped on lie tiory errand
along the Susquehanna, and the Delaware,
and the limpid Allegheny, until it reached
the distant shore of the groat lake whiob
bathes her northweetern confines. The fiery
cress that pieced from hand to hand and
gathers/the clansmen of the hills around the
banner of their chief never so traveled, never
lighted such a cotalegration as was kindled
by that message. Before the setting of en o the:
sun a hundred thousand Pennsylvania men
were begging for the privilege of laying down
their lives to thedelenee of the insulted flag
of their father.. The political managers of
the Democratic party who had bargained
against coercion and pledged themselves that
Pennsylvania would take aide. with the re
hellions States wore appalled by the-demon
stration, and slunk away from the public gale
which would have blasted them. It was only
when reverses overtook our arms—revolves
which were 'beam:monsoon of the PIM aeons
fal effort to propitiate themselves by taking
counsel with and employing meta of the same
typo of thought.—that they ventured to re
eantshaer
I lt e t m d
o to an t s i r p d . : t o y s e i t i os t teet;leofyi f
Eta:ant
a Republican Administration was unlit to
conduct the war, which they reinforced by the
argument that It was obliged to borrow its
general. almost exclutrely from the Demo
cratic party. If adranru made neceseary
after such a demonstration it wt, through
their nom. If it has proved ineffective or
unpopular, it I. bellow' they have endeavored
to make it so. '
The country knows how the question was
dealt with by the Democratic authorities of
New Turk. It knows, too, the process by
which the Democratic judge, of the Supreme
Court of Pennsylvania undertook, with fade
out precipitancy, and In the exercise of a
jurisdiction entirely new, to restrain the ez
scutiort of the law which authorized it. And
- we are reminded hers from day to day that
there are men among zw who apparently do
not intend that the aloft shall fled soldiers,
either white-ut black, If they can prevent it;
who insistthat we 'shall not enlist the negro
because ills a, privilege which" belongs only
to the white man; - who say to the white man
that tis ought net to volunteer 7bessase it is
sit abolition war; and that the cosisoliptiosais
sislassiblend unusasiary because we•- ought
se.Opensii on volantorerandrsho,afterdoing
emthing ps their power to render the
eccie bare sea t : mita. a coolnen
that iisould be absolutely liftable; • if-the
emit sigueittot so 'numb cuterjelatokstaxd
Itrrep Mg the iproaad that Illy turns -me
aided!.. Midi it stated' that thadL
. . —.
y _ S^dae.t :tiffs...k~wLYwliaisi~+.....l~'e>aw~•n~••m~k:[6-ti;.•tsutviLn..nwaV r~y;:.7sfi
- hitt of Qia gealleniutd.-Few York:who
Union inportataloowthlO
=dae his pat:folio imploir, nc doubt—wltont
three bondeed and EXtroallers, haying his
voterr,of course, most comfortably intact, cad
in a condition to govern the nation at least, if
they will not light for it. if he favors the way,
however, as he soya ha does. why does he not
endeavor to amend the law! If the commu
tation clause is the difficulty with his con
etlluentsould he thinks that .s loon man_can
pay $l,OOO for a substitute coo easily than
ho coo pay sloo, why does he not move to
strike it out?
I fear it cannot be made to suit gentlemen
of that cast of mind and heart, unless it tau
bo in framed no to defeat the object entirely.
Their constitutional scruples will not allow
them to do anything for the salvation of this
nation. They have found no difficulty hero
tofore in discovering in that instrument ev.
ery power thnt was required to further the in
i,reets of the divine Institution. They had
uo difficulty in regard to the Louisiana or
Florida purchases; none as to the annexation
of Texas; none as to the assumption of its
debts; none as to the purchase or leisure, at
the expense of another war like the Mexican
if necessary, of the gem of the Antilles.
When the attempt is made, however, to ex
tract anything valuable from that Instrument
for the interests of humanity or the preser
vation of the nation's life, kis no better than
a espy[ atortenes—without vitality, full of oh
stmetlons, impotent for good, but alive all
over, In all its members, and actively omnipo
tent, too, fur mischief. Those constitutional
expounders who strain at. gnat make no ae
count of taking in a camel at • breakfast. I
should despair of making anything out of
them by a constitutional argument.
Egret of the Recent Catastrophe In
By the lucet arrival of South Amertoan
new; we learn that in Santiago, and
throughout Chili, the greatest indignation
has been expressed at the fanaticism of the
priesthood, which was the cense of no horri
ble aisetsetroptir, nod at the ornel, heart
less conduct of thorn priests connected with
the church which was burned. With one
mind the people of S,ntiago demanded that
the building °Scold be razed to the ground,
and h.d not go, rhilthnt issued - an order to
this • fle,, v l , bstanding the must stren
-I.loile efreete of the prieete--mosi certainly
he peop;e would hove dohe the we, k them
selvev—ood now • struggle g o . eon b e tw een
rrim,te and people; she terser, if poeeible,
io reg, mu the p 'wee sad 11.11.teuce they
h re to. .1,1 the peep... their
I/ erthan el iboui tt.
D 3 the •elee of the people dote firer re
sult Lao been Oht•lLe I In an eel it the Seri
.10, 10.1. leleuel4rl.ll there are lo be uo it
I.tmlualion• of otturchce sad ep!eodid night
cervices, aid that proper tnetecure• be car
ried out to all toe churches as to proper
ecomiuutou sad vofficiont number of &ore.
Witty tine tye beet carried, the clergy
have nrinoged the publication of ■ ne•
necepoper L.r she de!euce of - teliginua it
1,1,3.21
Anotbsr I e.ult of Ode edict.; a the
oresouttition 01 a tire brigade for Santiago,
sod mm.h enthusiasm has been displayed
to this maitre. Toe ire compantea In Val.
p irate° ore the most popular of the social
ti,eitimioh. to the cry.
Two thousand one hundred corpses en.
trance,' hoot the “Ceroptnia . ' h►re linen
registered at lb. boost ground; freebies
there a 41.1), of stocks tents and pieces
nave b en found, and not a few sufferers
ui d %turreted. tr.) the effect of bolas
and other wounds, so that shout two thou_
sand flee hundred altogett.er may las safely
eettmated to bare perished through the
p loll s sad imptuioncia.
0., the 71st December a ■ieni:►r calatoiiy
had nearly brdnilen the whrthippers in the
San letdro Church. One of the numerous
candles on the altar came iu contact with•
pat of trtifiadal flowers, and, although the
fire was immediately extinguished, there
was curb a great anthems, rushing to the
doors, filling and crying, that the service
had to be closed for the Ohs.
Snertaan and Colfax
At •Irt witig convention held in Phila
delphia in 184$ two young gentlemen ap
peared as delegates from two democratic
distritti• in adjoining notes; and in 1852
they again appeared no deiegatea too whig
national convention. A delegate t•ose and
surd that r young friend of hie was roe
rut from a dietr . o t eo strongly democratic
that he could never expect hope la get an
office of any . kind at home. and he •ould,
tberefo, Liomicate se secretary of the
coneentioo. John Sherman, of Olio. Anotb
er delegate said that be also had a young
friend pthaeat ea • delegate from soother
strong democratic district, where he could
newer hope fora home office, god he, there
fore, notatolitti Schuyler Colfax, of Indi
ana, al assistant steretary. Two years
passed away, the incipient steps of the can
rpireey against the Union were taken by
the slaer-lorda, and kid:wee two old demo
critic districts of Ohio and Indians, John
Sherman and Schuyler Colfax were elected
to Cooler's', and en the Stet Monday of
December, 1855, they took their Bette In
the !louse of It 'presentative,.
Four years ego Mr. Sherman wu put in
nominal on for the Speakerehip of the House
by the It...publicans, but wiihdrew, and Mr.
P.notoroa wee Mitred. In March, 1801,
he was elected to the United States Senate
in rtece of Mr Chase, who remigned intake
ihr place of Secretary of the Treasury. Mr.
Colts' continued in the House and is now
tit Speaker. These two fortunate and sun.
cettafsi gent:erten were ban In the same
year; one is March, the other In May.
They hare Loth achieved an enviable rep•
matron arid an honored name; one start
ing iu life as an engineer on the Ohio
canal, and the of her as a printer.
..IrE rr 41) rEn T ISIEMEXTS.
IL BARREL PAINT.—A superior
O
articl% of llo.d Paint, for 00 Barriiv, and
Ter, clamp. LUCLUST n 001.1.111011.
LAHD OIL-8 bble. No. 1 Winter now
1.4 handl . g from roamer lo“pb Yiweo, lb, male by
IBAIAU 'DIUKLY t UV
YtA.Nos FUK RE:c.v.—A few re
good Flan. for not.
OtILILLOVIZ SLOWE D 43 fifth it ,
8010 agent for Matto & Co.'s mot Hanes Broth •
fog
MLIAR/EONS FOR RENT, compris-
In( 4, 4 % .3 5 octavo 31 elodvena.
Cll2, kIi.OITS BLUME, 43 Fifth Omni,
Sole Agent for Prince's Unrivalled Melodeon. and
Elannonicane. fse
VA'VER..-20 boxes Lreeh smoked
11 1L 121:ozur Lterrotit the tint of lb. wins...but re.
oolved Lod tor lode by the box of dozen, et the Feet.
4ly Gl...eery Sion a
. .
JOUN A. RLNSU&W,
corbel Marty sad Hand genets.
F IN A A A ti LIAM V2 4 .—Just, receivo
hum Nov INrk, outTly of Corned [toddler,
very tdru B 4 • brotkrut or tea tallith, for deity the
pound b 7 JOHN A. RENSHAW.
hy Corner Libßr4ll and Hand argots..
SPICED MINUS MEAT, ready for
baling, out tip In 6 lb. Uri or for nee by die Ib.•
nt the Faculty Grocery Store or
.10101 A. BXESILbW,
fel ammo. Liberty and Band ntrenta.•
(111LLE;i: X d tilllN —'llle finest
vl bruad liapnted,Jurt 'revived lu half brxrrand
JOlll4 A. ILES/IRAK,
comer Liberty .4 Marl Wiwi..
20TONS Slit/KT:I, 10 lONS YJNE
fitursTurr, an./ 10 TONG Vainly:od In
MISSE
.
E.T.701k112t.
82:1 Liberty al re.,t
VIA LULL AY. OHN 1--47110 bus
bro..kingnm giver J Con, lo bates Colam•
bla and Harald., now M IllononsMalw Wbart, for
sate by (ICTIO3LARILB & LOW.
• rso Liberty street. '
I . 7ICIPT
LINZ I
Luna
tie, Itaxrem Freeb, for irs/a by
lirtillT H. COLLIN/3.
STEAM new 111 LL I.l x CSALK,—
Situated ma the bank of the Ohlo,rar
from dot city, la the Borough of ISONtaky, The
Mill has ton acres of Lod with It, ia la good rung
llog ord,r, capable of cutting timber .14 fest In
ength, and admirably constructed for barge build.
In unman..
For further particulars address
• BANES k MaXASIXO,
Boz 67, tkorkkUrrinr P 0., Pa.
FARSI FOU SALE--Containing 125
acres, situate In Stealer tonostdp, on the old
Dotter mad, 2% miles fr om Spangle frolllog
The Improremenal are • good flnots desUleg bon.,
• frame beih with stone Dumont, and other nem
sary ontbandlogra an, a iargeorchard of anneal
grafted fruit. The home are ell la good ord., and
the 1.4 lnc high sta. of cultivation
Nor terms apply to BONS! STAMM, on the
pnonsee, or o .!chlt z atppws,,
No 89
foe:dmitspli
OTI herewithd that
Wine tbsseports &reptant* theta= ea
ammeter of Kr. 408 N IteitTW. buteber, In
Spring (IOUs; coonscltop lestb:liblob =se
Alobesti teentkme, to be =Mery tumult se
bele rtwaro 'Kr. liallatAX ba lifsfi
ribllel7ll Ml*
/44' • 1 0 6 41
•
PMLEIC JrO77l:lEB
Boss BRICKLAYERS, ATTEN-
Tubq —Ou and arm Mara Ist, Int, the
JOURNEYMEN BRICKLAYERS will request an
.drapes In ...g en of CO erste per day, by order of
resslatlon in BEICKLA ERRS' BlaErlllo.
OEM
10. AT A MEETING OF THE JOUR
NLYIIIN 062PENTERS of Plttb.gt,
end Allegheny, dolt on tbe 4th ltst , at the Emmet
Hotel, Allegheny, It woe rooked to demand sn ed.
eanteof 15 PZE CCHT. on their prenent vases, to
healn on the filet of llfarcla next.
DALE'd DATTALION, 116ru
wm.P P. T.—She fallawing a.med person.•
thatized to recant one Company melt for o.tt
he Bat
talion now biltig rallied by me to be attached to the
114th Bennaylaanfa Volunteers:
Copt. DAVID W. lIEGBAW, adqmorieta at
Prermit Maryttara Office, Allegheny City.
Capt. PARCEL TAGGART, Pitt borgh. Pt,
t'apt. SA3IB.EL W. CAIIPBBLI, Inch..., Po.
fe:tf ILICII altD 0. BALE.
YOUNG MEN'S LIBRARY AS
SOCIATION LLOTERES. •
PROFESSOR RICIIARDS will deliver the Secoud
Lecture of li.li Course liature the Amoebal.
ON TUESDAY EVENING 9TII, INST.
SUBJECT ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE ninth:wed ;
the Sacker and the Boom lir ; > Le.itifnlprinttain
in Vacua; Old Dinpate txploded ; Gailleo's /Bleat.
ma; The Terricallian Farcrlisteet Itepeatal ; the
History. Uses, Value sad t custruetton of the Barom
eter; Mercurial Ehower; Bolling Water without
Mat, and Freezing it to the prim...
Doom open at T o clock; Lecture coutntences at 71. i.
Pate. or Ttratirs—For one person In the counts
VIA ; Single Lecture ES cents. Yoe eel, at the
Mysie, Do k and Drug Stores. and at the door.
T. B. Hrsaan, Grimm W. Wart:tan,
Barons B. Tan. Tarmac Backer. ELL la.,
W mt.". W. Wars, 1111 MT M. ATWOOD.
fehtiitd Lecture Committee.
P111391..1e, Feb. CM, 1864.
O.EDITORS GAZETTE: Having nr
ired at home on a short leave of abseure I
droloLtie of /Slog the Battery which command
—boowo am IithSPTONS PITThIII2IIOII
TS/LT—before I retort. to the (rout.
You .UI obtics sne, therefore, by laaertlug In your
radar tba tottowlag attract tram Major (tapered
Rare.:lie call far troop for the !inroad Array Galls:
lltanatiattratta Etacaurrcaa SERVICF, t
Bateau Cowl. atrial:lra J. 15. f
Authority having inv. given me to ..crop tt; Yd
Corp. of lifty thousand (60.000) men far on. h genial
mimics, under my nonitomnd, as may be dimienated
by the War-Department. I appal to the citimene of
the =I District to aid me In tillingnp DATE EN ES
C and F,—tho amuse known se TROldrBiiN'e nod
ths Latter es HiSlPtaiN'S.—erlalen .me mimed In
Allegheny Denney. About one hundred two am re
quired to ell these Batteries, and It le deslrtil to fill
them to the maximum number of moo from itilm
lo
(Sagami) WINFIELD S. DIAN(' .K,
Maim General r
U. e
The !deb.& LOCAL or NITHA BOUNTI,
cash, In at:tattoo to the B v lament Bounty, le no.
offend for anflicletit men to
oEn Battery to the
Twaxlo•ota number o( . sit gnu buttery.
apply to ttol, T. -11 BAT NE, U. P. Ilseraltlng
**eat, No S. Telt:T*l atreot, , Capt. JR.
a. WRIGHT, Pnavost Kemal, G rod It*, smith
Paid attest, or JAM C PPROUL, U. h Ileerniorg
Agent, at Proroat Mantes omen, No. SO Fourth
*Watt, Plttsbu
•
NAM &SILL I [Lisa,
Cop Lain laidrpemlet,t Dauer, F,
NATIONAL BANK
CE==l
Capital
Ith triunes. to lucre.** re.
ml. Bank U co* orffanierff and to enmon-
Int operation.
We are prepared to no a general Rau% los burin.;
and offer our Pardo. St corteepor d. nt to Banks and
Banken throughout thy connt7.
Special attention given to uslicetloa In this utal
the adjoining City of Pittsburgh aa yen am on .11
parts of the country.
Moneys redivad on deposit. .od Exchange ,d 1 all
the principal oltine banglit and .old.
121.1".01.1,
S. II NEVIN, H. DAP IN,
/MIN ' , CAN. ; HIEN til GEILW to,
w3l. HARDIVIIIL ; JOHN THOHPIiON
BOTLIIL N
ST
HoIIKON,
JOIE% P. KRAMER. C.a.....
411.0.ey, 18C4.
13TH REGIMENT,
V. ■. IN PASTRY
♦ll voluntean rullotlng le II Iteginwut • 111 rt.
oar, n Boma, of
Four Hundred Dollars.
Tram Government, until Gm lint de, of March, irril
tbe highest local bounty offered by any Ward
Borough, Township or County.
Beerulting 018 m tie. NI NI ITS, above Smith
field Omni, Pittsbi;rgh.
DALLAS C. 1111111,
Copt. 11th infantry, Doers:psi Omer
&ataxia
0.002 TO VETERANsI
•DO9 TO HEW RECRCITS
lir Alithasteed v. L ll.ocnitting Ageucy, So. Z.:
CEDE6►L STILSZT. •Thmem.y t.Yt), °
the , Prornot Ma:guars 0111‘..
• •
Rom $lOO to ippo LOCAL DOIYSTT pold
to OEM Wendt'ciL iiloct rfs:mast.
tn. T. M. B•TIIT., Ilecraldvg donna.
HE ANNUAL MgitTING OF
TIIC EITOCETIOLDERS a the ALLIEGLIE.
rAttvir LEOLD COPANY will be tual4
at the-021m of the Compa M ny, on Washington toraet,
/MUlough, on TC/MDAY, f chat.. at 11
Welsch a. to., for tha nacoptlon of 1.1. Alumal
lb. statical of Maracas, sad transaction
at anett ether lonalnasi as may be present..
By older. IL. C. ulth,
toht4 Elecrrtsry sod Trrsgmr.r.
MONUNO•110..• DILLY/ 4,
Plttebtoeh, Tebroary 4th, 1864.
W.AN ELECTION FOIL THIRTEEN
MANAGERS of the Comp.) for erecting
a Mike cow the Monongthelo, opp‘alte
burg In lb. COuotty of A ll egheny, In amt. - salty to
an Act of Aemealtly passed Jacntary Toth, ISM, will
De held at the TOLL HULSE, on MONDAY, March
rth, 1166, at 2 o'clock p. m.
feektv• N. ISOLMES. Tecaanrer.
ELECTION NOTICE.—An E Inc
tor Null:lent, Nehmen nod Oflloem of
the Comps', for erecting o Drift, OM the elle
gheny Meer, oppollce Plusbarith in the moot, a
kllettbany, *Ol to held at the 10 1 L 1101173 E, at the
Beath end of the bridge, on MONDAY, th. 7th
of Much, at the hour of 2 0'c.1 , e2 p. m.
feteler itUIABUSG. Treasamr.
CANAL WMPANY.-1,
Mortara for Bat. Dtravors of the Etta
Anal Companf_lit_ be bald at their aka, In Fria,
on MONDAY., March 7th, 1 0 04, at 10 o'clock m.
A. OAVOLIET, raermary.
OM= Ede Canal Company, /
Etna lab. alb, lbet. f feBA2l.
Utt N FIE IS ELECTION.—On
MONDAY, tna 71. h day of Unruh taxi, as 11
aVook a. na., a mooting of the etoeteoldara of the
Greensburg • Plttabargh Turoplb Bawd Company
•ill be held at the Central Toll House, for De pur
pose of slanting Tiro Mangan and Two Aulltora, to
an,. for Um anal:Ong year.
folU.StdattssT CANAL SEGILILT. Trma•r.
' •
(ereansburg 8.r.1d p.m. copy.)
fl.k.ll•l.Bl3uktuit COAL ra
atillSClZ.-Th• member. of the "Pate/tore,
Coal Unhinge,. and all Inners cod Skipper. of
Coal, an ranually Mellott to attend the meeting to
he held at the IMar.l anode Room, on TUkSDAY,
Schrum 9th, 1864, at 144 o'clock p. m. Boehm. of
great importance sill Le brooght heron the meet
mg. By cedar.
ag 2t
A. D. SMITE, Treald•AL
THIRD NA'IIONA,L BANK,
PISTSBOBSEL—Au Election for Zito* DI.
rectors of thte • Dank urn be held on IaTULIDAY.
.the Bth of March, 1814, at the Oftlas of the Dime
davlrgre Institution, between the home of 9 .o 4 12
BArch e. m. ItOBCHT O. ISCIIIIERTZ,
feS:td ambler, P. T.
11V- I" a.ll'4lls jfifi-
OADL.--Lt. A. J 0 . 1139 UN, Light Battrao
WA Brigade, f. In the lily on Recruiting
bout teg;Wer_Deputmnt, and may be found as No.
6461)11
'TRW, over o •Obeap John.' Plan
U.
U . S. INTEREST COUPONS
Wo • ill my the hl,hest prl. for
U. 8. COUPONS?
gachAlog lbotri of 5.21 Lean, duo let May ot.t.
SEMPLE & JONES.
rump AND WOOD BIREATS.
De
ob"ru g EtiT
300 rigg
12.1bb10. Barre No. 1 Bolt;
aM do Clocluatl Na. 1 Lord Oil
30 bola dó blarcoon Soap ;
1 0 do do Mould Caudle,
traces Doyle BLar gams
BO dram Duckaso
BO do Wallboards ;
10 do No.l Tata;
Folvale by
LINDRLY A TELFORD,
187 Marty stmt.
DABS I RAMS! white and entered;
LV old limpapars and Books, and Whits Pspr
of all klade, borsht for csale,pr taken lo .:chance
l= p obierrie :bat. a n paiing amy blab
vice for them , at the soo t /tore of
01TY
RESIDENCE FOR SALE.—The
!loupe •ad Lot on North Casatareet, An*:
.1, 01012 d... reddens. ut-Walter Bryant, Zig.
extrude through to Liberty street, is ayselonie
planted with Mee and shrubbery.
gashed. hes II Mum, both,
No. 104 Federal street, Alirgberi. A n t, to
B. B. BRYAN,
T. E. IVAKEfH AM.
l OR A15P118.2L1.6 on moderate terms for
X cub. a Ras totof second-haw:lß 3,awda BLUED
AND SUDI7L/IR BOILERS. of different rim; alp,,
swrenit sacsaM-band ENGINES, of &Sawa altar;
ISBOITOIIT IRON MATTEL for Worn and
wheal boats. DOCTORS. Altai Saw and flour MR
lINGIBES and ISEIDEIT HOMERS.—
11:103:11..ELLIS,
Caro, Ilthxdp.
REMOVAL.Q-11Ehrtil" MGM' has
floored Ida stock of ORRUL and QUET,sB.
WARZ to &I.= WOOD sum attfelaing W.
Bapky, sauna be mill be gamed to show hk
evatenotrs a complete anuortosest of all =lithe in
kis lituksaltsd to the wants of families, reslanrszte,
welt, atau 'Ad ait7 and toaatt7 dealers.
. .
- g - =tato CU IhetWerdo UAW& bait 04
Gibb3a attestor 10 ura sztenllng bick usx
sigtorattwarat ~. Ore , Ner-k Dinainj,
inn, 41111016 70:4=,4ti ftr=bri
'94* A leg* ;moon num itria '
..rE aD rERTISEMEXTS.
THREE coTTAGE HOUSES FOR
BALI; froorloo. (Bagale7 • .
L. 0.) Second Wort. n;lo,!.• of on the Ilo• of Men
cheater noceonxer risOo^nr, 0.. rl7 oppoolto the msi.
&nacre' lion. Y 11,4
Also, ••CHOI. F. Col:At:II LU i , s 3KAI•, tulfola•
Lig the abate, eatlial • e+ronr .4 Allegheny
avenue and Falea• • n. 41 s bd l'Asy, feet dap.
The location le non 0i tht ns... tlnticabln In the city.
Tama easy. Aptly U.
I; N. Id Ohl • street,
. .
fr9:2w • 1..
ESTATE OF 1:1.1.1AII i, i).Nt;.
—Wlirr,L. L... • on lir,
estate of Elijah Loo: • 1- tulegh,
ny oonuty, ri,t; z .1 to tho u
danl:rtcl by th. . I sforototd,
notion I. hereby 1.1, • a • :oo • o obt-d 1., said
me to mat- trik. ook 4.1.1 those bat
luz veal pr.... , • tk, k ; nrol•tr*o..l. sl
the late ot 00 I.TI tin.% T
lt
the Ih day of "I.- authmetorno , l
for nettlemon. hot WF:III , PLL,
00 LONG,
A.:too:010re.,
fel.fitat
FOR. SALP.-A l Ot - NT V itEttatE.NCE
cmatalnlnp II acre, d at the Sharneburg
Station on the A llegt,ny alt.,' Ifni rm). Citltenn
l'atsrmrtr 11.•Illray Coe to,. ote•t - =I. s.
m tllnble, en
prov•ta •r,. • Paretifog OD. r; rooms,
Otrrlatt—houe.... cart-shod,
Ca
stable, Coal Mao.. (111,k.a too, 0. Tonent
hone., Ac., A.. V: coo Ineted to lend 1,1 pr..
from • never g rprint, to the'. kilt he ri and wash
and may 1.• a odorted c every room In the
No lot, r alto to. a rAllm; mitt, ell or glas•
work, Is to be found. Tb.,r Is au abottilatter of all
Mill. or fruit Itiquite or ri ITOHCOCK
tit•sre.o tl,r Itours n• 10 sc.l 11
114:1 tit
BARGAINS IN
Second-Hand Plano&
A 0 octavo ro4enitod ease. fora
to m tome:
e r,
I•on pla: Gale iu Mat rate or2r.SICO 00
A 6 octave r,40 o 0,1 ,rttera„llon
piste: mad. ty 11.11. tt a Cornotoo trA 00
A 0 octavo lon wood can. ioood coners, Iran
frame) too , lo 11‘,, tog A t'. 160 00
m g .
A 6 octave obo
.ny detest a.roms
made by Dr au a ..... .... 00
A o.c's,. ruaborauy can., aqua. corner.;
made Ilr 1.1..11. Otl
A 6 octave mahog.ry ra.roue 1 corner,:
mace by N4Ol •• 100 00
A 0 cwtave wainut tlt•rrno,. r 0 00
A 4 octane tua.l.-c•n) • •• 00
A hoe ave. 40w
For salo by C. C MELLOR,
8• A .p'..•did .tork now I . .aaaa an hand, at
pr,as from At . .A5 to EA , ' re?
•
'IIkIE PI
BURGf, VT WA TNlElf`i<itt#4l
L e4a
A Tem/0 RAI LW AT
TMOS:= '
and CL.S V ELAND • PITTSBURGH ,BALLBOAD.
WI NT 6R ARRANGEMENT.
On and after JANUARY leT, 18G4, trains run a*
U1u..., Via.
Por
L..•••• Pity I att
nlrglt ' ag r o. CleTE:rnd_
•: xa.j 1:4,5 1:46
. 1 1:45 p.m I 1 is p. p. to.
6:16 a. to.
A ni. at ritiebtlrgb— P. r. Nt - a C Hallway, 2.30
a m , p m 7VO p m wed 7:50 p. m. e. BP.
It , 10 a. to.. p. 803 p. m.
ACCO3ISODATION Alleglmay.
Yor F.r New B Pot New B.'. Per'Stetree.
I.IN p m lIS a. cu. 6:40 m. !
raoo,ooo
3 00,1)00
1:10 0 m. 3.T.3 p.lO e,cn p.
: 4:30 p. tn. , I
5. n,
Ro/mrwr,
Arrive at All,ll,ny—P. !Nall.), 7.20
, a. In, 2.35 p. m..cd 4:20 p. m. C. & P.
R.,loona
GEORGE PARKIN, Ticket Agent, .
r.l,n Pasaragrr Ptation, Pituburgh,
A. Q. CASSELBUIRT. Agar,
ghou City
IL E. PATRON,
G..te Pau Agent, P. F. W. A C. lry Co.
I' R. MI ERR,
gill ERNA N G ETTY have constantly
.1. .12 hao 1 a fall supply of the choir:et
LI Qtions.
Cootiwing of FINS mat COGNAC BRANDY, for
mrdatuat purposes; Pure Old GTE WIIISEST;
vital . , MADE] ILA sod SIiEHEY WINES; NEW
ENGLAND ANN JAMAICA Ecra : COOKING
W INS* sod BRAN DT . BLACKBERRY S CUSS.
ST BIIANIIT.
We have a few barrel. of OLD RYE WIITSEBT
which we 6.4 analyzed by 11r. Wyman to 18 , 11.
Belo* we give a copy or certificate received Crow him
at that time:
Prr2l32.a, M..y 2/d, 1.561.
News Tkwase tGels. I have examined V. 96-
druen of Whiskey left with ma, and dud it to ke
pars atVele. It le free from tosil oil. the coMMea
Impurity of Whiskey. Too owed have oo hesitation
to off, ma it at a gootitoe article.
°Lonna W. Wm...
no above we are prepared to sell by the latand,
gallon cr quart, or pot op In dozen. for shipping,
cud al prices to *eh our cwt.:nem We Invite tbe
attention of dealers sad antral, Inerebarsts to an en
sautnallon of our stock, feeling sure that tbey can
do sa well at our atabllstunent am any In the two
All piads delivered in either city free of charge, by
TIERNAN • WITT'S% No, &S Ohio greet,
N. E. corner of Diamond. Alleeway Oily.
fil.lerd
ArICEN'FION '
MIEN
Agitators and Settling Tanks,
Witch is at enc. , the.., as,l more Jambi* than lb•
old not od, by
BAILEY, FAiRELL & CO.,
Mo. ID lOURTR STEXCL
ALLEGRES It WHARF NtYrICE.—
Ail prima. running fraight, and especially On,
mast repot at the Wbuf Otgot, io order to obtain •
place to laud, and to settle their tetutrihge, which
moat be ahead. in adranco.
All oil mut be placed invariably thing] , tent about
the tester live; any fount below it .111 be charged
double wharfage, at it to impoulble to do bush:tem
when it is we beu the alder.
ail o I .d other freight meet tv removed forth
with from between the Anger bassets, when the reg
ular steamers ot the line land, as the great pressure
of busies. demands la
itli loading or unloading (leanly barrola batemen
the doper boards Fob ihited,lacert tur atearnara of
ghetto°.
EIMO;M;=1
All preens dealing in data tenet put their name on
each ilet, and wee report as moon ite they sell, is
neglect of this dot; le attended with for to tbseity.
•. ?melons Nl:nor - lug any &rta upon width the wharf.
age remains Impala will tredve tne extreme
of the
All dirt mat be taken to the Point and put ewer
the bank. • 'AIMS •LLIMi.
Bt Wheel:a:nor.
GENERAL FOREIGN AGENCY
AUSTIN BALDWIN & 00.,
12 DICOADWAY, NEW YORK.
Illmattantes .t lo• rata, on Great Dritaba, Ireland,
Ac. Calm, yaeeuo from Llmrpool or Ql.lll6olMolrit.
Packages tortrarde,l to all parts of the world.
WILLIAM BINGHAM, Jr.. Agemt,
oenzatricad Adams' Express °tiles, Pittsburgh
p F, tiUIkeRIBER,
AGIFRT YOH
John Marsh & Co.'s Soda Ash,
conet.tly rroelvtog the same, which ke Dal
lathe 6101.1 favorable terms. Thle A.b t. particu
rly adapted to tbe manufacture of °lave.
C. W. CHURCHMAN,
S 2 8017TH FRONT STRIIT, ITLUadeIEbIL
nallemwd
e j NO. BURIES` k (x).,
(Summon to J. d W. BANNA,)
Commission & Isomirarding 3lmehanti
OIL °ITT, I'/O
Ravine porottasod tho "ILmsta Warohouse” at Oil
City, and hallos ample room and facUltlto b we an
now prapnrod EB
ol;egveory" tAptlonl ° Xi proud: lit-
Wootton to all who may favor us with their patron.
oMobeem=
B°NMI —Pittsburgh City, Allegheny
c, tot) and Allreboui city
COMPIIO3IIBZ BONDS,
%nett sud bold, OD commis.l.tschudeely
B. B. BRYAN, Broker & Ituursace Agent.
811 sous stud, Bullies Building.
DrOur and lammed AgEdd-,
GO Fourth greet
GOLD AND SILVER.
vr..111 psy tbo binned market prise hr
GOLD AND SILVER COIN.
SEMPLE & JIMA,
TIMED ..623D TrO4D
.BTIZZTL
aaz•a
175 0.4f-TlitirOgg
WIMANT want an Agent fa nth' awn So so.
Ildt cedars Ow thalr ne with
sugssosisw dam and axes* often. Ws willpsy
mural aldw and (moss% otannlstinsenuals.
den. - fox pastinalsni, Duos, wawa as,m ;.
tad Midis - • To 0
de, _ ,h*:
daared Aged ths rated WOW •
DRY GOODS, fie.
OLT NEW GOODS
Will tie opon fur loop. i lioo eli
ONDAL the 15th Instant
ALEX. BATES,
No. '2l Filth Street
SPECIAL NOTICE.
COTTON STOCKINGS,
Left over from Hal season, and of saperlor q uality,
will be offered at real bar g aiss. by th e an g le pair or
down, for the neat two weeks.
ALL FANCY WOOLEN GOODS,
AND WOOL HOSIERY,
Closin g oat st low !lAMB.
SOILED HOOP SE I RTS
A few dossus cluein g out at half v ire.
Linen Handkerebidfs,
Much sleeper than new g oods will b.
Alexander's Best Kid Gloves.
ALa good —r ETlNs h 's c ratiV b Ar. rist"allt:
and Ten Cults pax,
at,
retail_
JOSEPH HOBNE &CO.,
77 :AND DI ALUM= EITRZET.
fen
N Ew SPRING GOODS I
IMMIZECEE3
J. NI. BURCHFIELD'S
Table Linens;
Napkins and Towels ;
Bleach'dd Unbleach'd Muslims;
Irish Linens ;
Figured Mohairs ;
Silk Lnstres;
Calicos and Delaines ;
Shawls and Cloaks.
BAIIGLIR9 llf 81:111111EIR 0001 M.
N. - E. Cot. Fourth and Market Iltrinitit.
BARGAINS
TO MAKE ROOM TOR OUR SPRTWO GOODS,
Wholesale .or
GREATLY REDUCED PRIOEB,
HOODS, SONTAGS,
LADIES' WOOL VENDS
A lam quantity of
HEAVY WOOL SOCHA
Tft&VFISNG or
NEGLIGEE SHEETS,
In short, ell WINTER GOODS.
w. continuo to keep. roll snorted .toot et
TRIMMINGS,
EMBROIDERIES,
HANDKERCHIEFS,
HOSIERY, GLOVES,
NOTIONS and NICK-NAM,
Teas.," E 127.1 color 'WM
WOILITID, of lag studs. •
Mir boiall, Ibrpt th• Nap,
No. 78 MARKET STREET
lIACSI73I & GUDE. •
Lo ' 'PRICES!
WINTER GOODS !
EATON, NAMUR( & CO.'S,
Nos. 17 and 19 Fifth. Bt.
In ordsr to ekes out onr reendottss stock of
WINTER GOODS,
Ws mill asks Extramttly Low Pyles/1410 on
to n 0.... . nedy Ws.
Merchants and. Dealers
trill sad some rare terrain to almost all clams of
goo&
WON. KAMM a 00..
•
- lam Um 17 sad IS hub start
BARGAINS YOH TES HOLIDAYS.
DRUB GOODS!
AT REEDIJOJEDIuaus
as LAY" 14 "7.50ir 4 con,
bum. ft.
G RE A T - isAMATICEI I
LADIEJS' u ±6B,
Swoon *by Mx letter tbso my IVlsh :
IL it pepbori Mb dtet ea tett.
11. ICUs:l4s the sag Winn bag. -
IL It pessurves froactet. •
jt tbi man samosakal
T. nil not ozwlbratb ea Lbw.
,034/410 ELM Jclalnninkt
, ftie Pettit► i #la rinser
Iv ~ rl
" ell , c :4" : 1:1:ir:
I 111101* eel mettle. oh 17
" *I OU X 1 411 36 at /SWF Mask
N HW GOODS I ,
BARKER & CO.'S,
59
Nuke! Street.
•
w. oiler a&
r7r7wmi
CLOSING OUT OM
AT 093 T I
KoCORD &
ill WOOD 01:8,1:12.
R. 1.), ij cer,, 1
GLAD TIDDSGS
FOB THE AFFLICTED!
!LEON'S GENUINE MEDICINES.
The toveutor of the direct of
PARERIA. BRAVA.
liter experience of may yam la rnd* pro.
doe, new oCett It to the aftikted Wear come 7
• ,
[rated orot.
What Is Parerla Brava ?-1688.
It bat, ewe ICA ban a gotta* ter
OALCIILOIIB MITEOTIONS;
Lvrt ANMATION or THE BOWiLB
IHTLAMMATION or ar KIMIX118: •
LICOCOBSUICISA.; sad all diatoms of
THX ÜBUi&EY 0110AEB
by tba laSent of the Mot
EE3=I
lad Prokaelon f nearly firo dab:trim 114 flail
arDicted ..,.id In e shape
Within the Reach of All.
Tor W diseases of the Blaidar. Yldney; Grassi,
or Drop./esl anslltnir. LKI medirelne invented en
cape with this compound In Its polite to Messily
ANNIHILATE DISEASE.
All tad properties I the drug am Issdaved by the
proeme of its compolmdlnz tnibetheps or the dia.
le►rind Its
STERLING PROPERTIES ALONE:
Young mew who may IM suffering from tho many
Ills conseqoant upon early todlactetlon to &bar,
should try ono bottle And be reline& the emp
loyes are
INDISPOSITION TO MCIDTION.
MVOCH INDISPOSITION.,
LOSS OT SIGHT..
PLIIIIIIING or BliSri
GIMILHAL LASSTTUDZ.
By not wrestled them algae, which so anent*T .
pohst u th e needle to the pole, to Impoterney, •
tenth Eta Preteatais Deasy and Death, a aims'
against nature to ounadtted—a;practical,
=III7IOIDL is tuba committed. rl= l .
or% tke awns that .as the affects of
EARLY INDISCRETION
Removal,; Uwe soul.' Gs far /au use for
Insane alsvlnms,
As Ina monis of those losinano Institutions pros*
that a very largo proportion of theft patients ems
their nocepthni Sad - derma:llon within them to early
habits of indiscrotkrn.
WOMEN, MIMED - OR SINGLE,
Or guar looking forward to the Married Wail.,
will and La the
EXTRACT OF PARESIS BRAVA
•
qSp,ortfr atalo tar Cblamb Cr Ba Ira
ma, tSan, afr Irrosolarl-
Pal ar Boomed Ka Bmamm ot the
Maur, Mr Maim, Ilarnoutem, and la abort ofr
dfams of as antral or -llrtaary Otpoa let dam
promod from .oy come obatorar.
"Throw Phyiric to the
layailotmottal bard. Zr you. see a outlaw ict
dPoll advice relative to your Hamm. Kereary,
Cloparia sadtseeted like ocetroma, foe all explisasat and
ilitqproin .
0113011 MBAR OF PRIM BUM
Absolutel7 corn most dimmer, of no :pallor What
looith of
Ma standing.= ew ers of dtst fa enable.
Ito coma tons
Soldiers Home Upon Furlough,
sad who cosy pnrtrap bin emllntunately contracted
diners, rill !lad the
EXTRACT OF PARERU BRAVA
the :Iyertltto for their ills. By Its pecolier artloo
upon the Kidneys tt awns a !repot dais to
Ahab, thereby removing otetrortloos sad rowing
the
ttere u r tterer wind an mar of Witmer* of the
U..
"1 - 0771\TC3- 11011 IsT 1
Baran of IN) nn alaieo quacks to to 'baud 113 an
tarp cities. Many althorn -
KNOW IOTHI!O OF THE PRACTICE OF KUM
and yet' they ate allowed to death* and decoy
THE UNWARY.
smtll aftentlosio, after of erdersi, death
Wattly en& thslz aneertng. •
GILSON'S OBIORINE WATER,
Is connection erith the Zxtract, le • epodle thr tlf•
Goosetteme Yretneeted Mott Ityptillttlo Pttholiee
um:Lily twee et ott standing.. would de well to try
GILSON'S PILLS,
♦ Mediate that Ws stood the tat of Teem and to
connection with the tee of the
HUM OF PAMELA BRAVA,
mill eactaally enutlakto any cu.% au matter of kw
long alsattlag.
Palos—Oßß DOLLAR . Pia DOTTI.R.
H. O.OAKLEY.
.413-erat Aitcnat..
Ste. 16 DETIMIX/T,MnISOar-
And Ste pie
Wholesale, and
nIN FULTOI4, - ...
•- **LIMA= D
. lIILDItto, !UT QTUZZT.
Jan
IMPROVED IILOOD.SEMMR.
rill UM COO Or AU &SUM " OXISINC 6001 Mk (1411,1
- _
'QF
Ousaroos ' or.
eseiff.rrydpdheirtarikrlti6
plasm' dm raclogeiht-
Beer, 'Totter ' ind--
Matto= Metes;
ikt=da. °dhow% remade% rioreamPusi, •
Dkesaal.GaseedDebi'lltyErdver ora.
plaid; Lass or Arparits,londtpidti, rod Iltemadi
acaplata tcedbor_with id, odor db.
odor fro=
' "- _onsiltfast tba
predatory ottani., As pawed Tad*,
Its *dos are isad bmlgoant, Aar •
coma% Idt. Iraids, whom
.
J. It. rums, ginigiiis;
, iiTtoleitiiie and Retail Agent,'
Nos. 67 AND 69 Foie way
PIPTICIV4intO . 4 . I.„
to "tali :ft ciao; airs is
loarir
ME=
'~, ; f
1